I took this about 30 minutes prior to sunset while taking a walk along the river front after dinner in Wilmington, Delaware. I liked the juxtaposition of the river and vegetation with the city skyline. The layering seemed to work; river and vegetation, the horizontal lines of buildings beyond the river followed by the tall vertical lines of the buildings creating the skyline. I would appreciate hearing any comments regarding the composition.
The focus appears a bit soft and I suspect that is a consequence of handheld @174mm with a 1.5 crop factor camera (Sony NEX 6).
I tried to be disciplined about the processing and would appreciate any comments; particularly with regard to workflow.
1. I first rotated to correct for a 1.75 degree lean and then cropped a bit off the left side to remove a gap between the frame edge and the left most building. I wanted a solid backdrop of buildings.
2. Having read somewhere that noise tends to be amplified as one makes various adjustments to the image I adjusted the Color Noise----->22, and Luminance Noise---->50. (All processing done in Lightroom 5). Of course the numeric values are just a consequence of what I thought looked better and my recollection is that those values are on a scale of 0 to 100.
3. After noise reduction I adjusted Sharpening------>30 from the default value of 25. In retrospect I'm not sure why I did so at this point but that's what I have in my notes. So much for being disciplined!
4. Thinking the image looked a bit flat I applied the Lightroom Medium Contrast Tone Curve.
5. Increased the color temp from 5550----->6060. The camera was on AWB and the image looked a bit cooler than my vision.
6. The pilings in the river and the vegetation to the right are important elements in the image to my eye so I gave them some local adjustments; Sharpness------>48 and Clarity------>34.
7. I wanted a little more depth in the large buildings so I applied some Local Contrast------>39.
I have tried to be subtle and keep the image close to the reality that I saw; nothing terribly dramatic. As a consequence I think it may still be a bit flat looking?
Any and all comments are appreciated regarding both composition and processing. Please feel free to modify the image as you please to illustrate a point.
Thanks,
Andrew